Katniss Everdeen is no longer the ruler of the Thanksgiving box-office weekend. Long live Queen Elsa of Arendelle!

Disney’s Frozen II (now playing in its second weekend) set a new standard for the holiday by bringing in $123.7 million domestically across the five-day frame between Wednesday and Sunday. The previous record holder was The Hunger Games: Catching Fire in 2017, which tallied up $109 million during the Thanksgiving period.

The first Frozen, which opened in November of 2013, only managed to hit just over $93 million during the holiday weekend, which also marked the movie's second week in theaters.

In the traditional three-day weekend format, Frozen II made $85.2 million. After just two weekends, the animated feature is closing in on $300 million in North America, with a current total of $287 million. Internationally, the long-awaited sequel has racked up more than $730 million in global box-office sales, basically making it inevitable that the movie will cross $1 billion before the year is out.

If we were Disney, we'd be toying with the idea of a third entry in the series at this point.

Video of &quot;Beyond Arendelle&quot; Featurette | Frozen 2

Directed by Jennifer Lee and Chris Buck (the directors of the original), the follow-up finds Anna (Kristen Bell), Elsa (Idina Menzel), Kristoff (Jonathan Groff), Olaf (Josh Gad), and Sven traveling to an enchanted forest that is sequestered from the rest of the world by a magical wall of mist. During the adventure, Elsa learns more about her mysterious ice powers and Anna tries to rectify a grave mistake made by her grandfather years before.

Another genre contender this Thanksgiving was Rian Johnson's Knives Out, an all-star whodunit that turns the Agatha Christie murder mystery concept on its head. Written and directed by Johnson (Looper, Star Wars: The Last Jedi), the movie slayed $41.6 million domestically for Lionsgate over the five-day holiday. Across the normal Friday-Sunday frame, it made $27 million.

Overseas, the film (which cost around $40 million to produce) brought in $28.3 million, for a global debut of $70 million.

In particular, Craig plays Benoit Blanc, a private investigator with a Southern twang looking into the murder of a famous murder mystery author, Harlan Thrombey (Plummer). Harlan just so happened to be the patriarch of an entitled family of petulant and bigoted brats—any of whom could have had a motive to kill the old man.

"The approach to Benoit Blanc, our detective in this, is very much that," Johnson told SYFY WIRE. "Giving him a Southern accent, especially in the context of him being amidst all these old-money New England WASPs, was a big, big part of it. Also, having him have this self-inflated ego. He refers to himself in the third person. That's all part of it. It's a universal element with all the great detectives in whodunit fiction specifically."